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  1. 16 de mar. de 2022 · She met her French husband, Etienne Szabo, at the Bastille Day parade in 1940, and married him just weeks later after a whirlwind romance. She was 19 and he was 31. They had a one-week honeymoon before he left to fight in Senegal, South Africa, Eritrea and Syria. Left alone in London, Violette worked as a switchboard operator during the Blitz ...

  2. 5 de feb. de 2023 · This article was originally published last year ahead of Lt. Violette Szabó’s 101st birthday commemorations. Nation.Cymru is revisiting the article by Ant Heald, inaugural winner of the Nigel Jenkins award, on the anniversary of Violette’s death on 5 February 1945. Ant Heald On the 26th June, a picnic will be held on The Groe in […]

  3. Violette Reine Elizabeth Szabo GC (née Bushell; 26 June 1921 – c. 5 February 1945) was a French/British agent during the Second World War.Her role was known as Special Operations Executive (SOE). She was twice parachuted into France to help the French resistance activity against German forces (the Wehrmacht).. During her second mission, Szabo was caught by the Germans.

  4. Szabo, Violette (1921–1945)British secret agent in France during World War II. Name variations: (code name) Louise. Source for ... beatings and torture were common at Ravensbrück. Prisoners shared bunks infested with lice, and the smell of death from the crematoriums was everywhere. They were forced to labor from dawn to dusk on ...

  5. During the Second World War, the British utilised an incredibly skilled network of spies who worked for SOE, the Special Operations Executive. These spies of...

  6. 11 de jul. de 2015 · Violette Szabo was just 23 when, in June 1944, she was caught behind enemy lines, ... ‘Do the thing you fear and the death of fear is certain’. I have always tried to live by that. ...

  7. Yet death will be but a pause. ... Actor Virginia McKenna, who had played Violette Szabo in Carve Her Name With Pride, released a record in 1974 where she recited the poem set to music. Actor Michael Hordern recited the poem and told the story behind it during his 1980 appearance on the BBC Radio 4 series With Great Pleasure.